His colleagues at the Globe credit Taylor for bringing the paper to the forefront of journalism over his 26 years as publisher from 1955 to 1981.

“Nobody in recent American journalism had a more exciting and satisfactory run than I did in my twenty-odd years working for Dave Taylor,” said Thomas Winship, editor-in-chief of the Globe while Taylor was publisher.

Taylor kept close ties to Harvard as a member of the Board of Overseers and the Harvard Club of Boston.

In 1965, Taylor raised more than $1.2 million dollars for Harvard’s Nieman Fellowship for journalists, matching a donation from the Ford Foundation.

“He made an extraordinary contribution to the future generation of Neiman fellows,” said Bob Giles, curator of the Nieman Foundation. “As a result of his leadership the Foundation is in a strong financial place today.”

Colleagues at the Globe remembered Taylor’s attachment to the University.

“I know he loved Harvard,” said Matthew V. Storin, Globe editor from 1993 and 2001 and current fellow at the Kennedy School of Government’s Shorenstein Center.

“We used to cover the Harvard commencement with about four clear pages of copy,” Storin said.

Taylor, or “Dave” as his Globe colleagues called him, graduated from Harvard in 1931 and joined the Globe as a junior accountant.

Taylor’s grandfather, Charles H. Taylor founded the newspaper and his father, William Osgood Taylor, preceded his son as publisher.

Taylor rose through the paper’s ranks, becoming business manager, treasurer, and then general manager in 1940.

After his father’s death in 1955, Taylor took the helm. As publisher of the Globe, Taylor turned the paper into the leading daily newspaper in the region, where it remains.

“He was instrumental in the Globe becoming a quality newspaper,” Storin said. “In the ’50s and ’60s it was by no means the best.”

The Globe also grew in prestige after Taylor assumed control, with 11 Pulitzer Prizes to its name.